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Estate Planning: Trusts Come to the RescueEstate Planning: Trusts Come to the Rescue

Education funding, the subject of Registered Rep.'s cover story this month, is only one reason to put aside funds for a child. Funds put into a minor's account of the proper type can be used not just for education, but for support of the child, maintenance, health and a wide variety of other purposes. Unfortunately, perhaps the most common device for passing wealth to children or grandchildren, created

Roy M. Adams, Senior Chairman of the Trusts & Estates Practice Group

February 1, 2002

6 Min Read
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Roy M. Adams

Education funding, the subject of Registered Rep.'s cover story this month, is only one reason to put aside funds for a child. Funds put into a minor's account of the proper type can be used not just for education, but for support of the child, maintenance, health and a wide variety of other purposes. Unfortunately, perhaps the most common device for passing wealth to children or grandchildren, created under the Uniform Gifts to Minors Act (UGMA) and the Uniform Transfers to Minors Act (UTMA), can be a trap.

On the surface, these vehicles appear to be the height of simplicity. You create an account, name an individual or institution as custodian and wait for the beneficiary to reach majority and claim the assets. State laws vary on what the custodian can and cannot do and at what age (18 or 21) a minor reaches majority.

But here, the simplicity ends. If the custodian (say, the father of the child) dies while acting as custodian, the entire account balance is included in the custodian's estate. If, to avoid this result, the father names his spouse (the mother) as custodian and she dies at a time when state law imposes upon her the duty to support the child (most often after the father's death), the account balance may be included in her estate.

Furthermore, the beneficiary has the responsibility to pay the federal and state income taxes generated by the management income and capital gains taxes generated by the account. If the beneficiary is under age 14 (with some exceptions), the federal income taxes are at his or her parents' tax rate. If the beneficiary dies while the account exists, you may have a probate estate, and since persons under age 18 cannot have wills, the property frequently passes (intestate) in part back to the parents or the siblings. If the siblings are minors, often you must create guardianship estates for them and be subject to court supervision and distribution for the siblings at age 18.

The parents cannot loan money to or borrow money from these accounts in many states and state statutes specify what the custodian may invest in, sometimes drastically limiting your ability as an investment advisor. And, if the parents, after discovering all of this, still want to transfer the account balance to trusts, they cannot, except in the state of Illinois.

Trust in Trusts

Trusts, in fact, are what you can use to avoid the tangles of UGMAs or UTMAs. In a trust, you can invest in what you wish, and your client can loan money to, and borrow from, a trust account. There are other advantages as well, including postponing distribution of principle to the beneficiary at any age your customer picks.

There are many kinds of trusts, but here we will talk about two simple ones: the Minor's Trust and the Crummey Trust.

The Minor's Trust, a creature of the Internal Revenue Code Section 2503(c), is a simple trust document to draft and its advantages over UTMAs or UGMAs are manifold. First, your customer names the trustee. And the trust can be authorized to invest in virtually any prudent investment. The customer can loan to, and borrow from, the trust at adequate interest rates, and even retain the right to change the trustee within limits. (Changing custodians under an UTMA or an UGMA can be difficult.)

The principle purposes of the trust must be education, support and maintenance of the beneficiary. Expenditures for routine support can be made, but will be taxed as income to the child's parents.

The Minor's Trust ends when the minor is 21, by federal law, even if state law puts majority at 18. Furthermore, if the child is given a right to withdraw the trust property at 21 for a 30-day period and chooses not to withdraw the trust property, the trust can retain that property until a later age specified in the trust document (yes — even age 60, if you want). And the child cannot, without the consent of the parents, make withdrawals from the trust property before the age of distribution specified in the trust.

If the child dies before receiving all that is in the trust, the property can pass to other beneficiaries, like other children or grandchildren, and be added to their Minor's Trust. This avoids the probate problem mentioned before with custodial accounts.

Income taxes are paid by the trust at very compressed rates. The first dollar over $7,500 of income is paid at the income tax rate of the highest income tax in effect at that time or the highest capital gains tax rate in effect at that time. You can control this tax phenomenon by investing heavily in growth stocks with low income, or municipal bonds — you certainly need no advice from me on this score, and it would not be worth anything anyway. Others manage my modest resources.

The next lesson is about the Crummey Trust. It's named after the courageous taxpayer who did not want his children to get the trust property at age 18 or 21. This is a much more complicated trust to draft and administer than a Minor's Trust, but I believe it is worth the effort. First, the age of distribution of the principle to your customer's beneficiary is set by the trust document, like half at age 35 and the balance at age 40, or any variation, including in trust for the beneficiary's lifetime.

If the beneficiary dies, the property can go to others, much like the Minor's Trust without probate or without guardianship for the other beneficiaries of a deceased beneficiary. Your customer can pick the trustee of his or her choice and can remove the trustee (again, within limits). The customer can borrow from, and loan to, the trust at adequate interest rates. Investments can be in whatever the trust document provides.

Income taxes are paid much like they are for UTMAs or UGMAs. The child's tax rate can be used only after the child is 14 or older, but beforehand the tax rate of the parents is applicable to the income taxes paid by the beneficiary of the Crummey Trust.

Contributions to a Crummey Trust can qualify for the annual gift-tax exclusion (usually $11,000 for a single person and $22,000 for a married couple; higher amounts can sometimes be allowed, as in the case of closely held stock or non-voting shares). But there are conditions: The beneficiary, if 18 or older (or the custodian for a younger beneficiary), must have 30 days after the property is contributed to withdraw any portion — or all — of it. Otherwise, the very important gift tax exclusion is unavailable. There is no such rule with the UTMA or the UGMA account or the Minor's Trust in order to obtain the annual exclusion.

Although a more complicated option, the Crummey Trust is perhaps the most popular choice over the Minor's Trust, UGMA or UTMA accounts. The reason: Folks just can't warm up to distributions being made to young people, or young people having the option to take money out of trust at age 21 or earlier.

Writer's BIO:
Roy M. Adams is head of the Trust and Estates Planning Group at law firm Kirkland & Ellis.

Minor's and Crummey Trusts Untangle UGMA and UTMA Web. They let:

  • Advisors invest in whatever they want.

  • Clients loan money to, and borrow money from, an account.

  • Clients postpone distribution of principle to any age.

About the Author

Roy M. Adams

Senior Chairman of the Trusts & Estates Practice Group, Sonnenschein Nath & Rosenthal LLP

Roy M. Adams (1940 - 2014)

 

Roy M. Adams is Senior Chairman of the Trusts & Estates Practice Group at the national law firm of Sonnenschein Nath & Rosenthal LLP, which has offices in Chicago, IL, New York City, NY, Short Hills, NJ, Los Angeles, CA, San Francisco, CA, Washington, DC, St. Louis, MO, Kansas City, MO, West Palm Beach, FL and Phoenix, AZ. Mr. Adams has previously been Co-Chair of the Trusts & Estates Practice Group at Schiff Hardin & Waite and Worldwide Head of the Trusts and Estates Practice Group at Kirkland & Ellis LLP.

Mr. Adams conducts an extensive national and international practice in the areas of estate and tax planning and administration, advising individuals and major families on wealth transfer techniques at Federal and state levels and private foundations and public charities. He lectures nationally and internationally and is a greatly sought-after speaker. He has frequently and successfully served as an expert witness, defending lawyers, accountants, banks and others who have been improperly accused of wrongdoing. He is admitted to practice in the states of New York and Illinois.

Mr. Adams is Professor Emeritus of Estate Planning and Taxation at Northwestern University School of Law where, for over 25 years, he has taught estate planning and taxation. He has received Northwestern University's Alumni Merit Award for his outstanding professional achievements. Mr. Adams also serves as a member of the Tax Advisory Boards of the Museum of Modern Art and of Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, both in New York City.

Mr. Adams is a member of the distinguished teaching faculty of Cannon Financial Institute, and is also a Senior Consultant to Cannon's management. He contributes extensively to internet publications through a joint venture with Cannon, and leads special professional education seminars and monthly telephone conferences, as well as web-casts and satellite broadcasts, on sophisticated but practical estate, trust and business succession planning and administration topics.

Mr. Adams is a Fellow of the American College of Trusts and Estates Counsel and is listed in "Best Lawyers in America." He has received high national recognition by Chambers USA in the practice area of Wealth Management and Trusts & Estates and is further acclaimed as a "New York Super Lawyer." Mr. Adams has been conferred "Best Lawyer" status by The American Lawyer. He is Special Consultant to Trusts & Estates Magazine, for which he writes a bimonthly column as well as a highly acclaimed quarterly column on tax fundamentals. He often contributes a column on estate planning, designed for the brokerage community, to Registered Representative Magazine, and articles on estate planning to Financial Advisor Magazine. His newest book, 21st Century Estate Planning: Practical Applications, was first published by Cannon Financial Institute in 2002, is revised each year, and has received great acclaim, particularly for its innovation, creativity and practical advice. The 2006 Edition has also been well received.

Mr. Adams has authored a two-volume text, Illinois Estate Planning, Will Drafting and Estate Administration, and has been a Contributing Editor toUnderstanding Living Trusts. Another of his popular publications is entitledWit & Wisdom – the Best of Roy Adams.